They have joined more than 6,000 who signed her e-petition calling on the Government to ensure cradle-to-grave care for people with learning disabilities. If it secures 100,000 signatures, the issue will be debated in the House of Commons.

‘There is such misery out there,’ says Rosa, who has been contacted by thousands of Mail on Sunday readers offering support for her campaign after she wrote movingly of the need to safeguard lifetime care for disabled people.

Guarantee: Rosa Monckton and her daughter Domenica, who has Down's Syndrome. The businesswoman and film-maker is fighting to have disability care funding ring-fenced

Chef Nigella Lawson, authors P. D. James
and Louis de Bernieres, playwright Sir Tom Stoppard, and businessman
Sir David Tang have also signed the petition.

Rosa's Adults In Need campaign is calling for the Government to ring-fence money allocated to councils for social care.

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She said: 'The response has been overwhelming'. She has been contacted by more than 1,500 parents and carers since the campaign began.

One correspondent, Geraldine Rimmer, of Palmers Green, North London, spoke of her battle with social services, who want to remove her son Jack, 21, from residential care into a ‘supported living’ house – in order to cut costs.

NOW SIGN UP TO ROSA'S E-PETITION

Rosa Monckton's e-petition calls on the Government to ring-fence funds allocated to the care of people with learning disabilities and to review the way in which the money is spent in order to ensure lifetime care.

If the petition secures 100,000 signatures, the issue will be debated in the House of Commons.

‘After one meeting, the social workers suddenly knew what was best for Jack,’ says Geraldine. ‘I visited a supported living house and cried. I explained that he was not able to talk or use sign language. They said he could write everything down. But he can’t write properly! It was a disgrace.’

‘There is such a lot of anger and
anguish out there as parents and carers struggle to get the care their
loved ones need,’ said Rosa.

‘There needs to be a change in the
system, away from this tick-box approach to people with learning
disabilities which does not treat them as individuals or provide any
compassion.’

In 2010, the Coalition Government promised an additional £2 billion to support adult social care by 2014-15.

‘The
money is not ring-fenced,’ explained Rosa, who is married to journalist
Dominic Lawson, and whose 16-year-old daughter Domenica has Down’s
syndrome.

‘This means we may get some very nicely painted town halls but not what some of the country’s most vulnerable people need.

‘The Government must set up a single
body to organise the distribution of money for adult social care and
they must ensure that it is spent on this vulnerable group of people.

‘If
you allocate a department a budget you want to know that the money has
been spent on what was intended – it is basic good practice.’

Rosa
has been emailed by people from all over the country, many facing a
daily struggle with social services, and united by a concern about what
will happen to their offspring in future.

Among
them was Helen Brown, 58, from Somerset, who is worried about what will
happen to her children Calum, 24, who has Asperger’s syndrome, and
Elly, 22, who suffers from autism.

‘It has been a full-time job for me just trying to get the services they need,’ Mrs Brown said.

‘My
daughter is now in residential care so I am more worried about what
will happen to my son, who still lives with us, when my husband and I
are gone.’

LAURA'S STORY: 'WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO HER WHEN WE DIE?'

Fears: Laura Owen, centre, with her parents Cathy and Brian in Poole, Dorset

When Laura Owen was just a year old she suffered a brain injury that left her with cerebral palsy.

Her mother, Cathy, 56, has devoted her life ever since to ensuring that Laura has the best care possible.

Now 26, Laura lives in her own flat, half a mile away from her family in Poole, Dorset.

She does her own shopping and
banking, studied for a BTEC in performing arts and loves to dance. But
Laura has no social worker and no care plan for the future.

‘My husband Brian had a heart attack
last year,’ says Cathy, a credit controller. ‘I have a constant,
underlying worry – what will happen to Laura when I die?

‘Just saying that sentence gives me a
pain right in my stomach. Laura sometimes has problems – such as
flooding the bathroom – and recently she had her bank account cut off. I
worry about who will help her when I am not here.

‘It is absolutely vital that we ring-fence money for people with learning disabilities. ‘Without proper funding, vulnerable people are just lost.’

Adrian
Coupar, 67, is concerned about the closure of local services attended
by his son Michael, 46, who suffers from cerebral palsy.

‘At the local day centre the care is excellent,’ said Mr Coupar, from Macclesfield.

‘Every
day my wife and I know Michael is safe. But it is now being closed and
all its “clients”, as they refer to people such as my son, are being
moved to a new centre.’

Adrian
and Helen are calling on Mail on Sunday readers to back the Adults In
Need campaign by going online to sign the e-petition.

Care Services Minister Paul Burstow said: ‘Urgent reform of the care and support system is needed.

‘We
know that council spending on social care is under pressure – that’s
why the Government is providing an extra £7.2 billion over four years to
local authorities so that they can protect access to care and support.’

SOPHIE'S STORY: 'WE GAVE UP OUR HOME TO FUND HER CARE'

Active: Sophie Kavanagh and her mother Gill, seen at Take That concert in Manchester last year

Sophie Kavanagh was born with
Angelman syndrome, a rare genetic condition that left her unable to
speak, suffering from epilepsy and functioning at the level of an
18-month-old child.

Her
residential special-needs school provided round-the-clock care but at
18, she had to make the difficult transition from childhood to adult
care services.

Her
father Paul gave up his work in IT and set up Silk Homecare Community
Interest Company, a specialist care service provider. Sophie now lives
happily in a bungalow with her school friend Catherine, and has 24-hour
care provided by experienced staff.

‘The biggest fear for my wife Gill and me was what would happen when we were no longer around,’ says Paul.

‘Generally
people with profound learning disabilities are put into long-stay
institutionalised care but Sophie has always had a very good, active
life and we wanted her to have that in future.

‘We
faced a huge battle with the local authorities to fund Sophie’s care.
We gave up our home and used all our savings to do this. A lot of
families would not be able to do that but we would love to see them be
able to achieve a similar standard of care for their own children.’